The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 19, 1914, Page 5

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“AMERICA New Sti to’wear. © Ladies Suits Cut 4 ™ N CLOTHING HOUSE LEADERS FOR 29 YEARS. “The. Daylight Store” . . _You-will want to dress up—‘and we areas usual —. ce the acknowledged headquarters for good things pment of Balmacaans and Mackinaws $5 to $15 ery Ladies Suit in the store at 33% % Discount. : -” Lafe Cassity is visiting relatives: in Oklahoma, = Sweaters, all wool, Black & Arnold. Dr. T. C. Boulware is visiting his son, John, at La Plata. Wool shirts $1, Black & Arnold. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Baker were up from Rich Hill Sunday. Overcoats $5 up, Black & Arnold. Mr. and Mrs. Len Shubert spent Sunday with relatives in Holden. Black & Arnold Clothing Co. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Norman enter- tained Harrisonville friends Sunday. A few more tons of nice Michigan cabbage on track at depot at 1tc Ib. Dr. C. A. Lusk ‘returned Wednes- day froma business trip to Kansas;}E, Black motored to Kansas City Thompson and Miss Nina Culver are City. Young men’s overcoats, Black & Arnold. W. B. Dawson was a_ business bes to Rich Hill the last of the week. High cut boots Arnold. Hon. W. O. Jackson made a busi- ness trip to/Kansas City the first of the week. ‘ Rough fencing for corn cribs at Wyatt’s. Wn. Tucker and F. E. Witter of Merwin spent the latter part of the week here. Why not do all your trading with us, Black & Arnold. Mrs. Ed Snyder has returned home from a visit with reJatives and friends at Joplin, Mo. We will sell you cheaper than ever come in, Black & Arnold. Oscar Schantz of Adrian spent Sat- urday in Butler looking after busi- ness matters. Overcoats at this year’s prices see the price, Black & Arnold. J. H. Strait of Hume made a busi- | ness trip to the county seat the latter} part of the week. Slickér lined duck coats. Guaran- teed waterproof, Black & Arnold. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stewart of Urich, Mo., are the guests of their daughter, Mrs. Alley. Don’t let your house burn. — Fire brick and flue lining at Logan-Moore Lumber Yard, Butler. Coat rears John H. Stone made a business trip to Rockville the latter part of the week. | S. W. P. Paring 360 square feet,‘ 2 coats, at Wyatt's. Miss Jennie Owen has_ returned home from a several day’s visit with $3.75, Black & 4 friends in Warrensburg. + Good results. S. W. “P. is toe best ewes W. W. Ferguson and J. D. Moore from Rich Hill Friday look- business matters. were up ing after Overcoats and Suits “For Men, Latest » 4 | week. Styles : For Young Men Corn cribs at Logan-Moore Lumber Yard, Butler. L. S. Bartlett and family have re- turned home from a several months stay near Billings, Montana. 50 gallon of pure house paint at Logan-Noore Lumber Yard, Butler. Mrs. Frank Smith of Rich Hill spent the latter part of the week here with her daughter, Miss Pearl. Chas. Baker of Hamburg, Arkan- sas, arrived Friday for a several days’ visit with relatives and friends. Sam Barr of the People’s Elevator Co. made a business trip to Kansas City the latter part of the week..- Miss Mattie Boulware has returned home from a visit at the home of Mrs. Mrs. H. E. Mulkey and children; C. C. Catterlin of this city is in re- left Thursday for Colorado where ceipt of afine large persimmon sent they will join Dr. Mulkey who left|him by his son, Walter B. Catterlin, several weeks ayo on account of poor | who is in the employ of a wholesale ‘health. house in Bozeman. Mont. The per- The Peoples: Bank of this city is! tomato. Pg al ied ee ye displaying a gourd raised by Mrs. | smooth. Mary VanHall. The gourd is four- | teen inches in diameter and is two| W. C. Hedden, (‘‘Gabe’”’) the well feet in length. | known and versatile correspondent | ‘ \ i | of the Review,- arrived Friday from Ed. T. Orr of Kansas City spent| a several months’ trip to idaho and Sunaey here ie ome folks. a | Wyoming. Gabe looks fineasthough mother, Mrs. Thos. Orr, accompanied | i ith him, |hlm to Kansas City Monday morning the tilp agreed. with. bith LB a brief visit. any other mart.—Rich Hill Review. | Our good friend Warren Ayres of) [ra Chadwick and Cary Kretsinger | Charlotte township, who has accept- charged with assaulting Homer Seig |ed a position in the state penitentiary | with a pistol were given a prelimin- \at Jefferson City, orders the Times ary hearing before Judge B | sent to his address. Jeter in this city Friday morning and ~ | Mr, and Mrs. J. W. Poffenbarger, J. B. Walton and Mr. and Mrs. W. Saturday spending Sunday there. Jim Welch spent several days the latter part of the week looking after business matters in Kansas City. R. W. Vail of the Welton Jewelry Co. is temporarily ‘‘off watch’’ on account of a boil on his right hand. C. C. Woods returned home the latter part of the week from a highly successful seasun on the race circuit.; Mrs. J. R. Jenkins, Miss Helen Braden and Miss Maude Green spent oe latter part of the week in Kansas ity. A. F. Fox spent several days the first of the week looking after busi- ness matters in Independence, Kan- sas. 2 Dr. H. M. Cannon spent several days the first of the week in Kansas City taking ‘the Scottish Rite Degree of Masonry. ~ The first issue of the Merwin Re- flector, published by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pattee of Amoret has reached our desk. Mr. and Mrs. A. Wagoner of Sum- mit township are rejoicing over the birth of a fine boy Saturday, Novem- ber 14, 1914, A delightful informal -dance was held at the Elks club rooms Friday , evening, the Billy Plumlee orchestra furnishing the music. Rev. R. M. Talbert and family and Mr. and Mrs. Kenney spent Thursday and Friday in Harrisonville, making the trip in the former's car. Mrs. B. F. Main has returned to her home in St. Louis after a visit here with the families of W. I. Cooper and Mrs. E. A. Barrett of Athol. Elmer Dixon, Cloyd Dixon and Billy Plumlee drove to La Cygne, Kansas, the latter part of the week spending Sunday there with friends. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Schupert of Kansas City who have been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. W. McFarland returned home Satur- Mrs. John Endtes who was called to Kansas City on account of the ill- ness of her niece, Mrs. Ida Baker, returned home the latter part of the Overcoats and Suits ‘avere bound over to the circuit court. They were each released upon |Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Culver, Miss Ora 1009 for their RRRRVEREE jattending the State Sunday School ‘ convention at Springfield. Chas. E. Fortune, recorder-elect, |has leased the residence property at the corner’ of Havanna and Pine {streets and will move to this city | from Rich Hill about December Ist. Announcement has been made of | the engagement of Miss Oselle Miller of Liberty and Mr. Ludwick Graves of Jefferson City. The marriage will take place in Liberty on Thanksgiving |Day. Mr. Graves is the oldest son of | Judge W. W. Graves of the Supreme | Court of Missouri. J. S. Pierce Pe Co., having, bought of William Jewell College. the insurance business of F. R. Allen | ee ae have moved to the T. W. Silver’s of-| _ Dr. J. F. Robinson will hold a pub- fice on Ohio street and are prepared to write insurance in good, roe companies. Bt | re 9 | Katy depot on Tuesday, November, | B. F, Jeter, clerk of Butler Camp 24,1914. Included in the sale will | No, 2458 Modern Woodmen of Amer- | be; 70 head of thorobred shorthorn |ica received notice Tuesday that the |cattle, a choice lot of standard bred j claim of James B. Hancock had been | horses and mules and a choice lot of jallowed. This is certainly a very | 0, I. C. sows, gilts and boars. - | prompt settlement. | | tai By AnD MMe. F. W. Krieg and little |W. Darby farm west of Foster was in a a aes Reus! lg agi Butler Monday and called at The! Krieg’s grandmother, Mrs. Geo. {Times to order advertising for his! relat; | public sale which will be held Mon- | Bartley and other relatives here, left " |Monday for Jasper county, and will ‘day, November 30. spend some days visiting relatives It is with the deepest regret that there before preceding on their visits |welearn of the death of the little | south and east thence home to Wash- child of Mr. and Mrs, Claude Baker ington. jof Pleasant Gap torgehip Monday.| postmaster General Burleson has | The We ci he freee at Double | indicated that in his annual report he | Branc es Tuesday alternoon. _ | purposed to renew his recommenda- Contract has been made for the / tions of last year in favor of Govern- the Standard Oil Company's tanks in} of the House bill fof readjustment of leit. wipe Sere Se has - basi — of pay for mails carried by railroads. contract for the new foundation. ; Col. Jas. N. Sharp of Mound town- | a rp of Moun Wy Charars, Jt tag moved tO iia) representative elect, who has his new property one half mile west Pls \of Butler. He will still retain the | been indisposed for the past week or arm, | two, was able to be in Butler Tues- name of the Charter Oak stock farm. : He is advertising a bunch of fine, oe ae fo ei ec Me spying boars for sale ot epectel prices, 1imself as highly gratified at the con- Mrs.-Edith Gibbs, state organizer | fidence the people of Bates County and elocutionist, will give a recital |have shown in his ability, and The and merchant’s representative drill in | Times ventures the prediction that this the near future for the benefit of the | confidence has not been misplaced. Butler W. C. T. U. - * Mrs. Katie Tuttle, Press Supt. The Peoples” Elevator Co. has pur- chased 10,000 bushels of this year’s corn and is still ing. The firm has commenced shelling but has made no. shipments as yet, in fact there seems to be no demand for rn in the grain centers.. The local seg is from 52c to 55c per bushel.— h Hill Review. - | Farm’s pure bred stock at Windsor, Ira Grant, who resides on the J. Charles C. Moore of San Francisco president of the Panama-Pacific In- ternational Exposition, in a telegram to Gov. Major urges the latter to im- press upon the people of Missouri that the exposition will open at the appointed time. He says the loss of exhibits through the war will be negligible; that the exposition will be opened oft schedule time, and that it will be 100 per cent complete when opened. Overcoats and Suits For Children, $2 to $7 Overcoats and Suits « For Youths Long Pants Special _ One Lot Suits,'Ages 3-4-5 . $1.50 See Our Nobby ~- $2 Hats . $5 to $12 He says | Missouri is good enough for him or He isa graduate \lic sale of the, Meadow Brook Stock ‘o., one half mile northwest of the Lipscomb Proved a Hero. Andy Lipscomb has not been given | half credit enough for his heroic deed | accomplished a week or soago in res- cuing a Kansas City man and his son from drowning in the Osage river | when, as was mentioned in ‘the Re- view afew days since, the cable on, which a trolley car operates in cross- | ing the stream, gave way. ‘he car, | which contained Mr. Lipscomb and a! Kansas-City hunter-and- his boy had | reached a point nearly mid-way of the river when the cable gave way. The || car, with its occupants, dropped like | a shot for a distance of forty-five feet | into twelve feet of water. The Kan- | sas City parties were entangled in the rope used to operate the car and sank with the box to the bottom. It came to the surface at once however, but ! had turned bottom side up and the| gentleman and hisson were under- | neath, Mr. Lipscomb jumped clear | of the car when falling and, although | he, too, felt the bottom of the river, | he paddled to the surface but his com- | panions were nowhere in sight. | About this time the wooden car came | up and, surmising that his friends | were underneath, he dived down to} investigate. He found them entang- | led as stated and rescued them both, | ed in doing it. Andy is not saying much about the || deed himself, but the Kansas City | hunting club lets no opportunity pass | to tell of itand to give their friend | boundless credit.—Rich Hill Review. | Stock Yards Open | Again in Chicago | Chicago, Ill., Nov. 16 (Monday).— | The Union Stock Yards and the pac ing-houses, scrubbed and disinfected | after nine days of quarantine in the Government and State fight against the hoof-and-mouth disease, opened for business at midnight, all parts of the industry having been declared thoroughly sanitary and rid of any | danger of spreading the disease. | There were 300 cars of stock on sid- | ings just outside the city limits at, midnight. These were to be brought | in a few hours later, but there was to | be no unloading until 6:15 o’clock, | when more than a hundred Federal | inspectors were to report for duty. F. | They were instructed to examine each | {animal as if entered the pen. Altogether, the receipts for Monday | were estimated at 800 cars, contain- ing 8,000 cattle, 15,000 sheep and 6,000 hogs. This estimate is about one- third of the usual Monday receipts. Real Estate Transfers Geo W Cathey to, P C Ewing 80 asec 13 Mingo.............+5+ 2450 Sam! Deaver to Joseph Coop 8 a sec 20Mound .............004, 5200 F A Butler to P B Bartz 31 a sec 80 Pleasant Gap .............- 1550 Sarah A Deaver to Joseph Coop \ 40 a sec 20 Mound............. 2800 | Edward Stroeber to R A Morri~ son 123!) a sec 4 New Home... 13380 W K Harris to Mrs B D Long- ' shore lots 7, 8 blk 5 West Side add Rich Hill................4+ 1100 Mary Kornhaus to Chas Korn- ! haus lots 1, 2 Warford’s addi- | tion Adrian... .....eeee eee eee 200 C Bruce Requa to J W Eggleson pt blk 29 Butler .............. 2350 Marriage Licenses BP VERMUON es. costes .t58 Butler Jerinie West .. Butler Claud Allen .... : . Pleasanton Hazel Bunks . .++s+..+Pleasanton | Chas Parker.... ...Galvy, Iowa Cora Thompson ..;...........+ orland H E Sheppard. ..... ..Rich Hill Adeline A Nentwig.. . Rich Hill Forty-eight years ago this month Col. O. D. Austin arrived in this city to take charge of the Bates County Record and with the exception of a few months, Mr. Austin has since that time been actively in the harness, a longer time than anyone in the state has been connected with any one paper. The Colonel has done much for the progress of the community during the nearly half century he has been here and the Record has been and is‘a power in the county. More} pover to your pen, Colonel Austin. A special delivery messenger of the | Chilhowee, Mo., Post Office delivered to Selden H. Shoemaker a _ letter, ; which contained $100 in $20 bills. | Accompanying the money was _an/ anonymous letter, which read: ‘‘This | is yours. I need money, but I_ need a clear conscience worse. Please | Spare me and advertise the receipt | of the money through The St. Louis | Republic.’”” Mr. Shoemaker cannot | remember who has done him out of | $100. | With his mouth over the muzzle of | a shotgun he didn’t know was loaded, | King Wilson, 10 years old, of Savan- nah, near St. Joseph, a negro, pulled | the trie r Friday night, and to-night | he is still alive, though his recovery | is very doubtful. The entire charge | lodged in the back of his head. Phy- | sicians consider it a miracle his head | wasn’t blown off. i are delivered to the house occupied by both, the Springfield Court of | Appeals held today in an opinion in| the suit of Mrs. Susan A. Aylor, re- wealthy mine operator of We! City. 4 live stock by the depredations of the beast. altho he himself was almost exhaust- | J’ Arriving Daily VISIT OUR STORE, SEE THE NICE GOODS Christmas will soon be here. You can find many nice gifts at the right prices. Many people are buying their presents and having them put aside. Why not you? You will be treated right at BEACHS’ Jewelry Store Jeweler and Opticians South Side Square BUTLER, - MISSOURI. Save Your Fyes Wear Beachs’ Glasses Come to us and have your eyes properly fitted with glasses. We are prepared to do the work and know how. Come in and let us show you BEACHS’ Jewelry Store Graduate Opticians South Side Square BUTLER, MISSOURI. 1 pair coming 3-year-old mules. 1 pair small 3-year-old mules. 5 red steer calves. 1 Jersey bull 14 months old. 1 Holstein heifer calf. 4 good second hand buggies. 3 good second hand carriages. 2 good 2d-hand spring wagons. 1 old farm wagon. 1 two-passenger automobile. 1 five-passenger automobile. 15 New Buggies at cut prices. See us for bargains. McFarland & Sons Butler, Missouri Pie Supper. There will be a pie supper at the Peru School House, Friday evening, November 20, 1914. Miss Ladine Harper. ~ Box Supper. Gifts from husband to wife are the | There will be a box t the wife’s personal. property when they | Miller school house, *"Wedne: ednesday, Nov. 25th, 1914.—-Everybody—come. Miss Cecel Nicolay, Teacher. We, the undersigned merchants of spandent, against Ben C. Aylor, a|-Butler, agree to close our respective places of business all day on Thanks- : ——__—__ giving day, Thursday 26th. A black bear, weighing 536 pounds, | Black & Arnold Clothing Co. was killed in theCurrent River coun-| walker-Mckibben Merc. Co. try near Eminence, Mo., last week by Sa 1 Le Merc. Co. iy farmers who-had been losing young ee American Clothing Co. Joe Meyer.

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